I had never used a blog before this RTF class, though I had read them. The positive aspects were definitely that it provided an easy way to have more grades than just test grades. I didn't actually encounter any difficulties in using the blogs except remembering to do them. The prompts where we got to talk about something other than the movies from the course or talk about something we had already seen or experienced. In one of mine, i talked about Fight Club, which is one of my favorite movies, so that definitely provided and extra incentive to do it and do it well. I would say that you should give us a little more freedom in that regard. I would definitely recommend using blogs in this course and others because like i said, when a professor only has tests, it really makes you sort of hate the class and then you spend your time worrying and freaking out because tests are generally hard.. Writing blogs gives you an interesting way to get more grades and be less reliant on the tests. I would suggest you have more prompts that let you draw from your own tastes and experiences.
Yes, you can use my blog in a paper or report.
Patrick's RTF Blog
Saturday, November 27, 2010
Sunday, November 21, 2010
Globalization
Globalization is basically the process of ideas and technologies spreading throughout the world and its cultures. Cultural imperialism related to media globalization is the idea that some cultures have more access to the newer technologies than others, representing an inequality of global power structure.
This map illustrates the fact that some countries don't have access to the same things as most of the rest of the world. In the information age, access to knowledge is essentially power, and since they don't have access to it, they are significantly less powerful than those that do.
Sunday, November 7, 2010
Advertising
In the UK the series Dexter has had a few very creative ads. They all feature some pop culture horror movie killer with the caption, "Nothing stops a serial killer like a serial killer." This ad is just plain old creative, though a couple are actually a bit morbid. I find it a powerful ad because it connects with anyone who has seen or even heard anything about these movies.
The appeals of this ad are to satisfy curiosity and I would have to say escape. First, curiosity: everyone, to some degree, had the need to satisfy their curiosity. They see an interesting advertisement that says what the show is, but relates it to iconic movie characters, they would most likely at least check what it was advertising. Next, escape: everyone watches TV to escape the normalcy of every day lives. Even the news can be more exciting than real life. Watching a show about serial killers killing serial killers would definitely be an escape from normalcy.
The appeals of this ad are to satisfy curiosity and I would have to say escape. First, curiosity: everyone, to some degree, had the need to satisfy their curiosity. They see an interesting advertisement that says what the show is, but relates it to iconic movie characters, they would most likely at least check what it was advertising. Next, escape: everyone watches TV to escape the normalcy of every day lives. Even the news can be more exciting than real life. Watching a show about serial killers killing serial killers would definitely be an escape from normalcy.
Sunday, October 31, 2010
The 3 Act Film
For my three act movie, I'll be talking about Fight Club. The first act, or the introduction, begins by actually starting at the end of the movie and then going through a flashback. It introduces the main character's insomnia and builds up more quickly after meeting Tyler Durden. It eventually peaks when they first introduce the actual fight club. The second act, or the complication, begins with the start of the fight club. It escalates as Tyler Durden starts giving the members more and more violent and destructive "homework." I would have to say that it peaks when the main character, often called the narrator, finds out that he and Tyler Durden are, in fact, the same person. The climax starts after, with the narrator turning himself in to the police to try and prevent Tyler from blowing up the headquarters of all the major credit card companies but winds up having to escape. He is eventually knocked unconscious, which is when Tyler gets control of his body. Then the peak is when he actually finds out how to kill Tyler. Unfortunately however, he didn't stop the bombs from going off and the movie ends with the buildings falling in the distance.
Sunday, October 24, 2010
The Sitcom
The characteristic of having mini resolutions is fairly central to most sitcoms. They typically have some problem or flaw in character that they wind up learning about and say they'll work on fixing it. This idea really goes hand in hand with the idea of character growth which usually tries to show a character growing, maturing and learning from his or her respective mistakes.
My example for each would have to be an episode of Full House i watched recently. Stephanie, the middle daughter, entered a spelling bee fully confident she would win because her dad taught her a trick to remember how to spell things easier. She got up on stage and and completely blanked on the first word. Afterwards, she was being a poor sport and ran off stage. Then they went home, where the winner of the bee showed up to give her her ribbon. They wound up having a mini spelling bee in which she misspelled the word sarsaparilla and ran out of the room again. Her dad walked in the room and told her he was disappointed and then explained why. There's your mini lesson. She then vowed to be a better loser and said she couldn't wait to lose to show her dad how good she was at it. And there's your character development.
Sunday, October 17, 2010
Let Me In
Let Me In is a movie about a vampire girl who befriends a young boy and in this movie are several examples of different shots talked about this week. There is one scene, which was a longshot, near the beginning of the movie where the boy is in the courtyard of his apartment complex and he's stabbing and talking like the kids that bully him. The shot was, if I remember it correctly, a long overhead shot to convey sadness, loneliness, an powerlessness. Another shot was a close up with a slight downward angle where the vampire is losing control at the sight of blood. They wanted to show the details in her face while showing how she too is powerless at times. There were also scenes in which the kid was bullied and those were medium shots to show the relationship of the bullies and the boy.
Sunday, October 10, 2010
The Studio System
The studio system after the starting to fail, changed the way it operated and still remain this way today. Now all they do is financially support movies that other people bring them in exchange for the rights to distribution, but back in the mid 1900s, they did pretty much everything themselves, from hiring the actors to distributing and writing the movie. An important aspect to me was the fact that each studio had actors on contract and the studio would market them. They also wound up creating movies for specific actors and actresses, and the actors also played pretty much the same role in every movie.
My specific example would have to be Humphrey Bogart. He was contracted to Fox Film Corporation, and starred in a movie called The Petrified Forest in which he played a gangster. He was then typecast as a gangster and starred in a series of B movie gangster films.
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